scholarly journals Contribuição à Geologia da Região de Frades, Município de Teresópolis (Rio de Janeiro)

1977 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 129-134
Author(s):  
João Baptista Filho ◽  
Benedito Souza Gomes ◽  
Francisco José da Silva

A geological mapping at the scale 1:50,000 based on air photographs at the scale 1:20.000 is being held near Frades, a small village between Teresopolis and Nova Friburgo, State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The main rock types are a coarse grained gneiss, migmatites and granites. The pigmatites exibits a dark differentiate (melanosome), sometimes widespread in area, which has been mapped as amphibolite sensu strictu. The latter, until now considered of magmatic origin, seems to have formed through migmatization processes.

2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 26-31
Author(s):  
Rodeano Roslee

Based on geological mapping and geohydrologic data, water resources planning in mountainous catchment areas in Kundasang are outlined. The area is underlain by thick Paleogene clastic sediment and old Quaternary gravels. These rock units are carved by numerous lineaments with complex structural styles developed during series of regional Tertiary tectonic activities. The tectonic complexities reduced the physical and mechanical properties of the rock units and produced intensive displacements and discontinuities among the strata, resulting in high degree of weathering process and instability. The weathered materials are unstable and may cause subsidence and sliding induced by high pore pressure subjected by both shallow and deep hydrodynamic processes. Evaluation of 60 boreholes data in the study area reveals that the depth of the groundwater table ranges from 1.90 m (6 feet) to 11.20 m (35 feet) deep. The groundwater level in the study area fluctuates even within a short period of any instability of climatic change. The Quaternary sand and gravel layers with variable thickness defined the major shallow aquifers within the underlying weathered materials while the highly fractured sedimentary rocks defined the major deep aquifers. Most of the aquifers within the top unconsolidated weathered clastic material are under unconfined condition. The sedimentary formations are coarse-grained clastic materials generally contain fractured porosity and exhibit higher permeability. However, below subsurface, much of the groundwater is partially confined. Movements of groundwater are sufficiently restricted area to cause slightly different in head depth zones during periods of heavy pumping. During periods of less draught, the various groundwater levels will be recovered to their respective original level. This condition resulted from discontinuous nature of sediments where zones of permeable sand and gravel are layered between less permeable beds of silt and clay. Aquifer characterization and geological data are given to assist the local agencies on the water resources planning of the study area.


2020 ◽  
Vol 60 ◽  
pp. 163-179
Author(s):  
Sameer Poudel ◽  
Lok Mani Oli ◽  
Lalu P. Paudel

Geological mapping was carried out in the Barpak-Bhachchek area of the Daraudi River valley, Gorkha district, West-Central Nepal for structural analysis. The area comprises rocks of the Higher Himalayan Crystalline and the Lesser Himalayan Sequence.  Pelitic and psammitic schist, quartzite, calc-quartzite, dolomitic marble, graphitic schist, gneiss are the main rock types within the Lesser Himalayan Sequence,  whereas banded gneiss and quartzite form a significant portion of the Higher Himalayan Crystalline in the study area. The area is affected by poly-phase deformation. Lesser Himalayan Sequence has suffered five deformational phases (DL1-DL2, D3-D5) whereas the Higher Himalayan Crystalline has suffered four deformational events (DH1, D3-D5). The Lesser Himalayan Sequence lying to the northern limb of the Gorkha-Kuncha Anticlinorium is contort into doubly plunging to dome-and-basin-like en echelon type of non-cylindrical folds as Baluwa Dome and Pokharatar Basin (DL2 and D4). The direction of shearing as indicated by shear sense indicators (C' Shear band and Mica fish) is top-to-south coinciding with regional sense of shear related to the MCT propagation. The dynamic recrystallization direction, obtained from rock dominant with phyllosilicate minerals is top-to-south and coincides with mineral lineation and indicate the mineral lineation is contemporary with dynamic recrystallization during the MCT propagation.


Author(s):  
Ying Wang ◽  
Anna K Ksienzyk ◽  
Ming Liu ◽  
Marco Brönner

Summary Modern geophysical data acquisition technology makes it possible to measure multiple geophysical properties with high spatial density over large areas with great efficiency. Instead of presenting these co-located multi-geophysical datasets in separate maps, we take advantage of cluster analysis and its pattern exploration power to generate a cluster map with objectively integrated information. Each cluster in the resulting cluster map is characterised by multi-geophysical properties and can be associated with certain geological attributes or rock types based on existing geological maps, field data and rock sample analysis. Such a cluster map is usually high in resolution and proven to be more helpful than single-attribute maps in terms of assisting geological mapping and interpretation. In this paper, we present the workflow and technical details of applying cluster analysis to multi-geophysical data of a study area in the Trøndelag region in Mid-Norway. We address the importance of carefully designed pre-processing procedures regarding the input datasets to ensure an unbiased data integration using cluster analysis. Random Forest as a supervised machine learning method for classification/regression is strategically employed post-clustering for quality evaluation of the results. The multi-geophysical data used for this study include airborne magnetic, frequency electromagnetic and radiometric measurements, together with ground gravity measurements. Due to the nature of these input data, the resulting cluster map carries multi-depth information. When associated with available geological information, the cluster map can help interpret not only bedrock outcrops, but also rocks underneath the sediment cover.


1988 ◽  
Vol 52 (364) ◽  
pp. 43-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. A. Kjarsgaard ◽  
D. L. Hamilton

AbstractThe work on liquid immiscibility in carbonate-silicate systems of Freestone and Hamilton (1980) has been extended to include alkali-poor and alkali-free compositions. Immiscibility is shown to occur on the joins albite-calcite and anorthite-calcite at 5 kbar. These results make it possible to interpret ocellar structure between calcite-rich spheroids in lamproite or kimberlite host rock as products of liquid immiscibility. The common sequence of rock types found in carbonatite complexes of melilitite-ijolite-urtite-phonolite is interpreted as being the result of both fractional crystallization and liquid fractionation, the corresponding carbonatite composition changing from nearly pure CaCO3 (±MgCO3) progressively to natrocarbonate. A carbonate melt cooling in isolation will suffer crystal fractionation, the residual liquid producing the rarer ferrocarbonatites, etc., whilst the crystal accumulate of calcite (dolomite) plus other phases such as magnetite, apatite, baryte, pyrochlore, etc., are the raw material for the coarse-grained intrusive carbonatites commonly found in ring complexes.


1970 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 1357-1373 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. R. Wynne-Edwards ◽  
A. Nandi ◽  
M. M. Kehlenbeck ◽  
A. F. Laurin ◽  
K. N. M. Sharma ◽  
...  

Since 1965, the Quebec Department of Natural Resources has conducted reconnaissance mapping in the Grenville Province, completing to date over 70 000 square miles (181 000 km2). In 1968 a computer-based data processing system was designed at Queen's University, and applied to this Grenville Project. Data are recorded in the field on input documents designed to recover a complete description of the structure and lithology of an outcrop in a standard and reproducible form. From these records a data bank, now with descriptions of over 5000 outcrops, has been constructed for the field seasons of 1968 and 1969. Lthological sorting programs based on the textural and mineralogical qualities used to define rock types have been written to provide listings of some 40 potential map-units. Outcrop maps identifying lithologies have been drawn on a computer-driven drum plotter to provide the geologist with a basic document from which to make geological interpretation. Structural data have been extracted and plotted in equal-area projections, and also plotted on maps directly by machine, using standard structural symbols for layering, foliation, and lineation. The system has upgraded the standard of data collection in the field, and provides a rapid and versatile means of handling data and of interpreting the geology. The data bank, when made publicly available, will enable users of government geological maps and reports to reinterpret the area in their own manner, or freely to add any proprietary data in the preparation of revisions.


1969 ◽  
Vol 37 (288) ◽  
pp. 472-479 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. F. Strong

SummaryA study of augite in over three hundred thin sections of mainly alkalic rocks permits the distinction of two main types of hour-glass structure. The common ‘swallow-tailed’, sometimes skeletal augite crystals are found in the fine-grained groundmass of many rock types, and it is suggested that rapid crystallization alone accounts for their formation. Hence, this type of hour-glass structure has been called ‘quench hour-glass’. The hour-glass structures of larger augite crystals of porphyritic and coarse-grained rocks are commonly described as hour-glass ‘zoning’, as they result primarily from compositional differences between the different sectors. These were formed under conditions of relatively slower cooling than the ‘quench hour-glass’, and thus cannot be explained in the same way. They are thought to have formed by a process involving adsorption of impurities on a particular crystal face so as to impede growth of these faces, producing an initial skeleton of hour-glass form, which is completed by later crystallization of augite richer in FeO, Na2O, TiO2, and Al2O3. This hypothesis also explains the patchy zoning of other augite crystals, casting doubt on some petrogenetic interpretations of such zones as core zones.


2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 189-202
Author(s):  
Stylianos Aspiotis ◽  
Jochen Schlüter ◽  
Kaja Harter-Uibopuu ◽  
Boriana Mihailova

Abstract. Raman spectroscopy has been applied to check if there are detectible material differences beneath the inscribed and non-inscribed areas of marble-based written artefacts, which could be further used to visualize lost or hardly readable text via suitable mapping. As a case study, marble segments with ∼ 2000-year-old inscribed letters from Asia Minor (western Turkey) and marble gravestones with 66 ± 14-year-old inscriptions from the cemetery of Ohlsdorf (Hamburg, Germany) have been subjected to Raman spectroscopy, as well as to complementary X-ray diffraction, wavelength-dispersive electron probe microanalysis, and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, to thoroughly study the effect of different environmental conditions, grain size, and inscription age on the nature and penetration depth of marble alteration. The results demonstrate that environmental conditions rule over the type of dominant weathering changes, which are carotenoid molecular inclusions produced by lichen and amorphous carbon for marbles from Hamburg and Asia Minor, respectively. The alteration is much stronger in medium- and coarse-grained than in fine-grained marble, but it is suppressed by letter colouring. In the absence of letter colouring, the weathering-related products in both ancient and modern engraved marbles are more abundant beneath than away from the engraved areas, and the penetration depth is larger due to the enhancement of fissures and micro-cracks around the inscribed areas. We show that the Raman intensity ratio between the strongest peak of the weathering-related product (ν(C=C) ∼ 1520 cm−1 for carotenoids or the G peak ∼ 1595 cm−1 for soot-like carbon) and the strongest peak of marble (CO3 stretching near 1087 cm−1) can serve as a quantitative marker to indirectly map the lateral distribution of cracks induced during the inscribing process and hence can potentially be used to trace lost text on vanished marble inscriptions. This approach can be applied to other rock types, but further studies are required to identify the corresponding autochthonous weathering-related products.


Author(s):  
Andriy Yatsyshyn ◽  
Andriy Bogucki ◽  
Danuta Olszewska-Nejbert ◽  
Maciej Bąbel

The main lithological characteristics of the channel facies of the Susidovychi terrace, which correspond to the high (situated over the canyon) groups of Dnister terraces, were given. The investigations in the gravel pit at Kulakivtsi proved that the alluvium of the terrace has been formed in two stages. During the first stage, the lower 1.5 thick bed of the alluvium was deposited. The upper one, nearly 4 m thick alluvium bed was formed in the next, second one depositional stage. The stages of the alluvium formation were recorded in the changes of the granulometric and petrographical composition of the alluvium, and of the roundness of the coarse-grained clasts. The transition between these two alluvial beds is outlined by the voluminous intercalations of the sand lenses, and also by a change in the colour of the alluvial deposits. Granulometric composition of the alluvium of the channel facies, in general, changes little in the section. Only in the transition zone from the lower to the upper part of the alluvial deposits, there is a sharp, abrupt increase in the content of gravels and a sharp reduction in the content of boulders. Generally, in the composition of the alluvium two dominant and two subordinate components are clearly identified. The pebble grains and the sandy-clay matrix are the dominant components, whereas the gravel grains and the boulders are less common. Petrographic composition of the coarse-grained fraction of the terrace alluvium proved to be the richest of all the so far investigated sections of the high (situated over the canyon) terraces of the Dnister River (at Kunysivtsi, Ivane-Puste, Repuzhyntsi, and Lysychnyky). The pebbles 40–100 mm in diameter show particularly diverse petrographic composition which includes fragments of nine types of rocks: the four of the Carpathian provenance (sandstone, aleurite, cherts, and quartzite), and the five of the Podillian provenance (red-coloured Devonian sandstone, Albian cherts and sandstone, and lithothamnian and cryptocrystalline chemogenic limestone). More precisely, the richest is the lower part of the alluvial deposits where the fragments of all the nine rock types occur. The upper part of the alluvium is markedly poorer because only the five rock types occur there. Diversity of the petrographic composition of the alluvium decreased by reducing the local Podillian types of rocks, which are represented only by the red-coloured Devonian sandstones. The composition of the Carpathian types of rocks remained unchanged. The detected changes in the granulometric and petrographic composition of the alluvium of the investigated terrace permitted to show that the principal providers of the local (Podillian) debris of rocks was played by the Podillian tributaries of the Dnister River. The Dnister alone transported mainly the Carpathian material and only the small volume of Podillian rocks represented by the debris of the red-coloured Devonian sandstones. It was also found that the accumulation of the alluvial deposits of the Susidovychi terrace in the Kulakivtsi section took place in the conditions of restructuring of the Dnister palaeodrainage system. In the initial stages of this terrace formation, the palaeo-Dnister was directed from the village Dobryvliany further north than today, and it entered into the present-day Tupa River valley at environs of the village Bedrykivtsi. In the vicinity of the village Bedrykivtsi, the palaeo-Dnister was turning sharply eastward and proceeded along the present-day river valleys of Tupa and Seret. In the later stages of the Susidovychi terrace formation, the palaeo-Dnister left the portion of its valley stretching between the villages Bedrykivtsi and Schytivtsi, and it shifted several hundred meters to the south and has stopped practically within its current canyon valley. The desolate portion of its palaeo-valley located between the villages Bedrykivtsy and Kasperivtsi has been inherited by the Tupa River and the lower portion of this palaeo-valley located between the villages Kasperivtsi and Schytivtsi – by the Seret River. Key words: palaeo-Dnister, over the canyon terraces, Susidovychi terrace, alluvium, granulometric composition, petrographical composition, roundness, Carpathian material, Podillian material.


Author(s):  
Sara Salehi

Lithological mapping using remote sensing depends, in part, on the identification of rock types by their spectral characteristics. Chemical and physical properties of minerals and rocks determine their diagnostic spectral features throughout the electromagnetic spectrum. Shifts in the position and changes in the shape and depth of these features can be explained by variations in chemical composition of minerals. Detection of such variations is vital for discriminating minerals with similar chemical composition. Compared with multispectral image data, airborne or spaceborne hyperspectral imagery offers higher spectral resolution, which makes it possible to estimate the mineral composition of the rocks under study without direct contact. Arctic environments provide challenging ground for geological mapping and mineral exploration. Inaccessibility commonly complicates ground surveys, and the presence of ice, vegetation and rock-encrusting lichens hinders remote sensing surveys. This study addresses the following objectives: 1. Modelling the impact of lichen on the spectra of the rock substrate; 2. Identification of a robust lichen index for the deconvolution of lichen and rock mixtures and 3. Multiscale hyperspectral analysis of lithologies in areas with abundant lichens.


2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 445 ◽  
Author(s):  
Humberto Luis Siqueira Reis ◽  
Maria Sílvia Carvalho Barbosa ◽  
Fernando Flecha de Alckmim ◽  
Antonio Carlos Pedrosa Soares

Localizada na porção sudoeste da Bacia do São Francisco, a área abrangida pela Folha Serra Selada (1:100.000) contém rochas sedimentares deformadas do Grupo Bambuí (Neoproterozoico), localmente recobertas, em pronunciada discordância, pelos sedimentos e depósitos vulcanoclásticos/epiclásticos cretáceos dos grupos Areado e Mata da Corda, respectivamente. Os dados aerogeofísicos mostram dois domínios magnetométricos principais. Um deles é caracterizado por anomaliasde baixa frequência (ABF), aparentemente relacionadas a estruturas do embasamento pré-cambriano local. O outro é marcado por anomalias de alta frequência (AAF),representando os depósitos vulconoclásticos/epiclásticos do Grupo Mata da Corda. O Grupo Bambuí exibe teores de K e Th intermediários a altos (1 a 3% e 10 a 16ppm, respectivamente), enquanto os teores de U giram em torno de 2,5 ppm. Esse dados mostram algumas variações, geralmente influenciadas pela distribuição dos diferentes litotipos, feições estruturais e ocorrência de emanações de hidrocarbonetos. Os sedimentos do Grupo Areado, por sua vez, mostram baixos conteúdos deK, Th e U (<1%, <10 ppm e <2 ppm, respectivamente). As rochas do Grupo Mata da Corda e coberturas associadas têm teores muito baixos de K (subtraços) e altas concentrações de Th e U (>20 ppm e >3 ppm, respectivamente). Estes valores parecem sofrer grande influência dos processos de intemperismo. As análises realizadas confirmam a grande aplicabilidade dos levantamentos aerogeofísicos no mapeamento geológico e constituem excelentes ferramentas no entendimento do cenário tectônico e dos depósitos de hidrocarbonetos da região sudoeste da Bacia do Sâo Francisco. ABSTRACT: Located in the southwestern portion of São Francisco Basin, the region covered by the Serra Selada quadrangle (1:100.000) contains deformed rocks ofthe Neoproterozoic Bambuí Group, unconformably overlain by Cretaceous sedimentary and volcaniclastic rocks of the Areado and Mata da Corda groups, respectively. The aerogeophysical data shows two main magnetometric domains. A low frequency anomalies domain is apparently related to deep structures of Precambrian basement. High frequency anomalies represent the volcaniclastic/epiclastic deposits of Mata da Corda Group. The Bambuí Group exhibits intermediate-to-high K and Th contents (1 to 3% and 10 to 16 ppm, respectively), while U-levels are around 2.5 ppm. Significant changes in these values are caused by the distribution of rock types, tectonic features and hydrocarbon exudations. Areado Group sediments show low K (<1 %), low Th (<10 ppm) and low U (<2 ppm). Mata da Corda Group volcanics and associated covers exhibit very low K (sub-traces), and high Th and U concentrations (>20 and 3 ppm, respectively). These values seem to be strikingly influenced by weathering processes. The performed analyses confirm the applicability of aerogeophysical data in geological mapping, and represents an important tool for the studyof both the tectonic scenario and hydrocarbon accumulations in south western São Francisco Basin.Keywords: magnetometry, gamaespectrometry, Serra Selada Quadrangle, São Francisco Basin.


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